Most of the actual game was made in a few weeks time, but from scratch to published app it took almost six weeks of part time work. A lot of this time was spent banging my head into various walls. Again, Titanium is great, but it’s a young framework with all the kinks that follows. There has been quite a few bugs, and the documentation hasn’t always been up to date – but this is much better nowadays. What more – since most other developers are as clueless as yourself, It’s been hard finding good resources and getting help. I did however get a trial for Appcelerator’s Premium Subscription, with 48-hours guaranteed response, and I must say it’s really good stuff. The developers themselves answers all your stupid questions and relieves most of the wall banging. If you can afford it, go for it!

By releasing the code for Golingo, we hope to relieve some of the headaches surrounding developing packaged HTML5 apps. I do not say that it’s not full of faults, because it is, but at least it is a working example full of faults. Please don’t hesitate to dig through the code to see what is going on. We believe we’ve solved some common problems that you too will run in to when using Titanium, for example transparently calling native functions from a webview (and vice versa) using callbacks and trickery. Here’s a quick recap of that: